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Electricity is an integral part of daily life, yet it’s
something we think little about – until the lights go out. Today, harvesting
renewable energy is big business. Wind
has rapidly grown in the past 10 years because its cost-per-unit of energy has
dropped and because of the demand created by State Renewable Energy Standards
(RES). In the near future, we expect
wind energy will be used to help states meet carbon reduction goals set in the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s recently announced Clean Power Plan
rule.

To meet the state and federal objectives, however,
transmission is greatly needed. In fact,
transmission is the key to unlocking the rich wind energy potential for the
Midwest – and the nation – yet, it has not seen a meaningful improvement in
more than 30 years. As the market for
wind energy grows, creating a “farm to market road” for wind energy is
increasingly urgent. A robust
transmission network also opens the electricity market for wind to compete with
other generation resources.

In the Midwest, there is a considerable investment in
transmission already underway. In 2011, the Midcontinent Independent System
Operator (MISO) approved its first Multi-Value Project (MVPs) portfolio of 17
transmission lines. The 17 MVP transmission lines will be built at an
approximate cost of $5.9 billion, and will carry about 14,000 megawatts of
clean wind energy. Arguably the most important transmission line in the MISO
MVP portfolio is the Badger-Coulee line.
While the Badger-Coulee line is only estimated to be 160- to 180-miles
long, running from North La Crosse to Madison, Wisconsin, it is needed for both
in-state development and to unlock a significant bottleneck between Minnesota,
the Dakotas and Wisconsin. Construction of the roughly 800 miles of CapX2020 transmission projects
taking place in the upper Midwest began in 2011, and is expected to continue
through 2015; and three Clean Line
Energy Partners’ high-voltage transmission projects in the mid-section of
the country are capable of delivering thousands of megawatts of renewable
energy from the wind-rich heartland to load centers across the country. Because the wind
is always blowing somewhere, having a well-integrated electric grid allows
electricity to be re-directed wherever it is needed. And, that improves reliability.

The additional lines provide additional capacity to carry
the lowest cost energy (usually from wind) resources. Increasing the amount of wind generation will
also save consumers money as low-cost wind energy displaces generators that are
more costly to run.

The rate we pay for electricity generally has three cost
components -- the cost of generating electricity, the cost of transmitting
electricity over transmission lines, and the cost of delivering the electricity
from transmission lines to your homes.
The cost of transmitting electricity over transmission lines amounts to
about 7% of the total rate we pay for electricity. The small increase in transmission costs
needed to pay for the MVP (and other transmission) lines will be far exceeded
by the reduction in the cost to generate electricity.

In addition to reducing the cost of producing electricity,
the lines will also boost state and local economies. These lines are billion dollar investments that
contribute to economic growth, and create thousands of jobs. The wind resources that will be built as a
consequence of transmission projects will also infuse millions of dollars of
tax revenue into local coffers.

Currently in the MISO states, about 50% of the RPS goals
have been met, which means there is still approximately 12,000 megawatts of
renewable energy that needs to be put into operation in the Midwest. Further demand for renewable energy is likely
to come from the U.S. EPA’s Clean Power Plan rule. That rule allows states to develop plans to
reduce carbon emissions from existing electric generating plants between 2020
and 2030. To reduce CO2 emissions states
can use wind energy, which emits no CO2, in place of energy from heavy CO2
emitting coal plants. Wind developers
are no-doubt counting on new transmission lines to meet the growing need for
renewable energy in the Midwest. In many
cases wind developers cannot move their projects forward without transmission
lines being built.

The bottom line is that transmission is vital for ensuring the
lights stay on and for helping facilitate a healthy, competitive, and efficient
energy market.